Cupboard and Cabinets

Cupboard Shelves

There are many generously proportioned cupboards in the Applause 500. Fitting shelves to
these makes much better use of the space.

I made the shelves from clear pine lining board, each shelf about 2/3 – 3/4 the depth of
the cupboard and each individually fitted. The shelves rest on battens screwed to the sides
of the cupboard, but are mostly otherwise not fixed. The pine is stained with Western Cedar
colour Wattyl Colorwood Interior Stain to match the beech colour of the wood furniture.

The overhead cupboards are numbered 1 to 8, starting behind the driver's seat and progressing
clockwise around the van. Cupboards 1 – 3 are above the table, cupboards 4 – 6 are
above the bed, cupboard 7 is above the stove and sink, and cupboard 8, the "technical cupboard",
is above the fridge.

The long shelf for cupboards 1 to 3 has a front lip, sloping forward, to retain its contents.
It is actually three shelves, loosely dovetailed together so that they can be removed if
necessary.

The shelves for cupboards 4 and 5 also have a front lip: these are used for clothing.

For cupboard 6, a crockery cupboard, a tightly fitting shelf is fitted.

The shelf for cupboard 7 is broad and has to fit around a vent pipe and another box cutout.
The cupboard is used for cooking items and condiments, so the shelf front lip is taller and
pierced with holes to make small items more visible.

Cupboard 8, the "technical cupboard", is not fitted with a shelf. It is used for tools, parts,
and liquids, and is where the 12 V power sockets are mostly fitted and supplied from, for
example the cooling fan power socket above the table.

Cabinet Shelves

The cabinets under the stove and under the sink, are tall and a shelf in each gives
much improved usability of the space for food and kitchen equipment storage. The shelves
have to fit around various obstacles in the cabinets.

Sliding Shelf for Portable Cooker

The under-sink cabinet was originally designed to be a mini wardrobe, but we have never used it
as that and the fitted shelf reinforces that. What's more, by adding a sliding shelf below the other
I have made a pull-out platform for the
portable cooker that uses disposable butane cylinders.

I mounted 400 mm full-extension ball bearing runners,
Hettich International model KA5632 from Mitre10, on blocks that fill in the width of the cabinet.
These runners are chrome plated steel with a 45 kg load capacity, 12.7 mm installation width, and
have a "roll-out prevention" feature. The shelf is then the full width of the exterior access door
opening, less the width of the runners, as shown in the view here of the shelf closed up with the
cooker on it.

The shelf is covered in 0.8 mm aluminium sheet. This is also used to cover a section of the cabinet
door and part of the opening above the sliding shelf, to act as a heat shield. The door also serves as
a wind shield. A spare gas cylinder lies on its side next to the shelf against the outer wall of the
cabinet.

Cabinet Magnetic Catches

In use, it is desirable to leave the cabinet doors below the cooktop and sink unlatched. But then they
have a tendency to swing open when the motorhome is not level. Following an idea from a friend, I have
added magnetic catches to each of these cabinet doors. A "Prestige" brand white self-aligning magnetic
catch 30 mm wide and 2 kg pull strength is recessed into the cabinet front and the strike plate is
screwed to the door.